Jason Aldean’s music video for controversial song pulled by CMT... Overreaction?

Paco Dennis

SF VIP
Location
Mid-Missouri
There has been more fallout regarding Jason Aldean’s controversial single, “Try That in a Small Town.”

CMT confirmed to CNN on Wednesday that the music video for the song has been pulled off the country network’s air.

Billboard was the first to report the news. CNN has reached out to reps for Aldean for comment.


The song was released in May, but according to Billboard the accompanying video wasn’t released until July 14 and had been in heavy rotation through Sunday before it was pulled on Monday.

The lyrics, critics say, are evocative of vigilantism, racism and “sundown towns” that practice a form of all white segregation in which people of color and others who were considered outsiders knew they faced violence if they were not out of an area before the sun went down.

The controversy over “Try That in a Small Town” reached a new level with the recent music video release for the song. Some viewers noticed scenes in the video were shot in front of what appears to be the Maury County Courthouse in Columbia, Tennessee. The courthouse has been the site of several incidents of racial violence, including the 1927 lynching of a Black man named Henry Choate. It also served as a backdrop for the Columbia Race Riot in 1946.

The video also includes footage from police brutality protests and shots from surveillance cameras showing robberies.

In a tweet on Tuesday, Aldean took issue with the criticism, writing, “There isn’t a single video clip that isn’t real news footage.”

But one commenter called it a “modern lynching song.”

Aldean sings:

“Cuss out a cop, spit in his face

Stomp on the flag and light it up

Yeah, ya think you’re tough

Well, try that in a small town

See how far ya make it down the road

Around here, we take care of our own

You cross that line, it won’t take long

For you to find out, I recommend you don’t

Try that in a small town.”

He defended those lyrics in his tweet.

“Try That In A Small Town, for me, refers to the feeling of a community that I had growing up, where we took care of our neighbors, regardless of differences of background or belief. Because they were our neighbors, and that was above any differences,” wrote Aldean, who was born and raised in Macon, a mid-sized city in central Georgia.

But it’s not been received as such by some critics.

“As Tennessee lawmakers, we have an obligation to condemn Jason Aldean’s heinous song calling for racist violence,” Tennessee State Representative Justin Jones tweeted Tuesday. “What a shameful vision of gun extremism and vigilantism. We will continue to call for common sense gun laws, that protect ALL our children and communities.”

While singing about guns is certainly not uncommon in country songs of any era, some listeners thought the lyrics were a bit puzzling given Aldean’s tragic history with gun violence. (Aldean is not credited as a writer on the song.)

The entertainer was performing at the Route 91 Music Harvest Festival in Las Vegas in 2017 when a gunman shot repeatedly into the crowd, killing 58 people and injuring hundreds more. The incident is the deadliest mass shooting in American history.

After the shooting, Aldean spoke out about his emotional experience and expressed an openness for more gun control laws. He acknowledged the mass shooting in his social media statement Tuesday, noting, “NO ONE, including me, wants to continue to see senseless headlines or families ripped apart.”

https://www.cnn.com/2023/07/19/entertainment/jason-aldean-cmt-music-video/index.html

 

It's not the first time that country singer showed his true colors. Back in the 60's, when people were angry over the war and racism, Merle Haggard was singing, lyrics like: 'America, love it or leave it". It showed that he didn't care about anyone but himself. I interpreted it as, support the war. If you are having problems because of your race, keep it to yourself, and love the country.
 
All the uproar will turn that song into some sort of group anthem. Let it lay. Songs come and go. There are a few that have really gotten my goat over the years…but they fade
 

It's being blown out of proportion. It only says there are people who refuse to be victims in this country. They expect law & order where they live, which is being denied to a lot of others.

How many of us have had enough of hearing about the unchecked crime going on in the major cities on the news every night? It's very sad when you hear the latest report & nothing seriously is being done to curb it by those in charge. No arrests, no prosecutions, no one being held responsible for bad decisions the law breakers made themselves ... just the excuses that the criminal is the real victim.

Those bearing the brunt of it are the law-abiding taxpayers that just want to live their lives in peace & go about their business. It seems they are expected to live with this trouble daily & may face prosecution defending themselves or others, but also it seems those in charge want them to accept it as a normal way to live. This is not a normal way to live.
 
Last edited:
And thuggin' is alright; disgusting filthy rap songs about committing robbery or glorifying gun violence and shooting someone over a battle of egos - these things are okay. But if a white American country boy says anything at all, well, he's a white supremacist looking to cause racial strife. Utter bovine scatology, and it's the status quo these days.

Set cities on fire, engage in rioting on a grand scale, assault innocent people, destroy businesses, loot stores, do everything you can to try and turn this country into some Third World hellhole and enjoy the luxury of having a biased news media lie for you, cover up for you, make excuses for you. There are shadowy financiers and big-city DAs who refuse to prosecute you or even jail you. But let one country boy write a song about how such things are not welcome in small town America, and whining babies lose their poop.

Looks like the Streisand effect is in full swing ...
"Try That In A Small Town" ~ #1 song on iTunes and can be purchased for $1.29 ~ #1 Trending song on YouTube
YouTube Currently ~ 8.2M Views, 511K Likes, 2.57M Subscribers (and numbers are going up quick) "Try That In A Small Town"

From Jason's Twitter ...

o24OVrt.jpg
 
Last edited:
I don't think pointing out that some communities have different political ideas is earthshattering. If one town has all BMWs parked in the driveway, and another has nothing but pickups, there will be differing politics. History is an attempt to record what actually happened. And what happened wasn't always a fairy tale, where everybody lived happily ever after. So, why is a song about reality so disturbing?
 
I take the song to mean that if you burn flags and attack cops in a small town, you'll get the crap beaten out of ya. I live in a small town... it's true. We had a robber attack one of our officers last week... he didn't make it out of town... he's in jail. People do take care of their own. Maybe some don't understand the dynamics of a small town. There would be so many injustices worthy to be fought for and are ignored.

Sometimes I see rap and hip hop lyrics that make me want to 🤮 because of the graphic violence that is being condoned. Never heard a stink about any of it because by golly, those music artists have that great freedom of speech protection. You're right, @Murrmurr ... history seems to indicate that books will be next. And so many are going to claim "dang, never saw it coming."
 
The Twitter post says it all .......... the clips used were all from NEWS and ok to show there...... few put together is is now racist and promoting something?
That makes ZERO sense ....anytime MEDIA is throwing a hissy fit i look and almost never see what they TELL us this or that is about.........
 
Last edited:
He’s an artist that creates songs. If you don’t like it, turn him off.

I have seen RAP videos of guys flashing and pointing guns at the cameras. Also, AR’s. The language is also unsuitable to most decent people. Girls in the videos look like trash, but all of that is OK with today’s woke society.

I do as I preach. I turn it off.

 
He’s an artist that creates songs. If you don’t like it, turn him off.

I have seen RAP videos of guys flashing and pointing guns at the cameras. Also, AR’s. The language is also unsuitable to most decent people. Girls in the videos look like trash, but all of that is OK with today’s woke society.

I do as I preach. I turn it off.


Agree strongly here .
 
If you don't stir the pot it will get thick with crap. Pot needs stirring and people need to start thinking again.

you have your opinion and I have mine which I respect, the "view" is their view and if you dare disagree they "cancel" you up so to speak.They would better help people if they would allow all views to be heard instead of cutting to commercial or walking off stage like spoiled kids.
 
Last edited:
Some of these "protests" were absolute violence fueled by mob mentality IMO and destruction that harmed those living in the area that wanted nothing to do with the violence. However, this song also doesn't sit right with me. It's got that sundown town feeling. And I don't like it.
 
If people like the song it will have longevity. That is okay with me. He can write what he wants and sing what he wants. Just cause i never liked heavy metal doesnt make it my job to eliminate it. I dont like opera or most classical either
 
Most of the riot clips were from Canada, the song was written by 4 men, the video was filmed in front of a Court house where a black man was lynched, the singer is not or never was from a small town.....trash...just more crap to divide.
 
And Hannah Montana and several films and music videos had been filmed at that court house.
It is/was a popular filming location outside of Nashville.

As far as the "news" clips in the video, they are stock images and clips from several countries ...
Fact Check: Some Video Clips Are NOT "Real News Footage" In Jason Aldean's 'Try That In A Small Town' Music Video
There are of course, tons of clips the producers COULD have used, but might have been sued for copyright infringement.

Jason Aldean didn't write "Try That In A Small Town" ... but he performed it. That's really him in the music video.
 
Last edited:
And John Denver was not from Colorado.
And Tony Bennett never actually flew to the moon. I'm thinking Rudolph couldn't fly and his nose probably wasn't red either. I'm not getting why someone would have had to be from a small town to sing about a small town. I'm from one and was born in another... but that doesn't mean I can't sing about loving New York.
 


Back
Top